“Pray accept my apologies,” I answered. “You have said and done nothing. I make it a rule in these distressing cases always to anticipate the worst. It breaks the blow by meeting it halfway, and so on. Inexpressibly relieved, I am sure, to hear that nobody is dead. Anybody ill?”
I opened my eyes and looked at him. Was he very yellow when he came in, or had he turned very yellow in the last minute or two? I really can’t say, and I can’t ask Louis, because he was not in the room at the time.
“Anybody ill?” I repeated, observing that my national composure still appeared to affect him.
“That is part of my bad news, Mr. Fairlie. Yes. Somebody is ill.”
“Grieved, I am sure. Which of them is it?”